This is another of the so-called spinal remedies. I will not, as I did under COCCULUS, quote what authorities say from a pathological standpoint. All seem to agree that it paralyzes from below upwards, and the poisoning of Socrates with it is adduced in illustration. It ought to be a remedy for locomotor ataxia. The strongest characteristic I know, from a homeopathic standpoint, is its peculiar vertigo, which is much aggravated by TURNINGTHEHEADSIDEWISE. (COLOC, turning head to left.) Turning over in bed is the same. Some say LYINGDOWNINBEDANDTURNINGOVER. I have found that it is not so much the

LYINGDOWN as it is the turning of the HEADSIDEWISE, whether in an upright or horizontal posture.

I once treated a case of what seemed to be locomotor ataxia with this remedy.

The patient had been slowly losing the use of his legs; could not stand in the dark; and when he walked along the street would make his wife walk either ahead of him, or behind him, for the act of looking sidewise at her or in the least turning head or eyes that way would cause him to stagger or fall.

CONIUM cured him. It would always aggravate at first, but he would greatly improve after stopping the remedy. The aggravation was just as invariable after taking a dose of Fincke's c. m. potency as from anything lower, but the improvement lasted longer after it.

Taking an occasional dose from a week to four weeks apart completely cured him in about a year. It was a bad case, of years' standing, before I took him.

I have often verified this symptom in the vertigo of old people, where it is most frequently found; but it also often accompanies various affections in all ages, and especially is found in ovarian and uterine affections. I know of no remedy that has this symptom so strongly.

There is a form of ophthalmia in strumous subjects which calls for CONIUM in preference to any other remedy, and the peculiar, prominent and uncommon (as Hahnemann says, Organon, paragraph 153) symptom is, PHOTOPHOBIA, INTENSE, OUTOFALLPROPORTIONTOTHEOBJECTIVESIGNS of inflammation in the eye. The pains are worse at night and terribly aggravated by the least ray of light, relieved in dark room and by pressure.

There may or may not be ulcers on the cornea. CONIUM

is also one of our best remedies for falling of the eye-lids, as are three other remedies, viz.: GELSEMIUM, CAUSTICUM and SEPIA. "Swelling and induration of glands, with tingling and stitches after CONTUSIONSORBRUISES." Many cases of lumps or swellings in the breasts (for which CONIUM seems to have a particular affinity) have disappeared under the action of this remedy. Even cancerous affections of breasts (ASTERIASRUBENS), uterus and stomach have been helped or cured, especially if the trouble seems to have originated in a BLOWORINJURY to the part. It is perhaps the first remedy to be thought of in all cases of tumors, scirrhous or otherwise, coming on after contusions, especially if they are of stony hardness and heavy feeling. CONIUM and SILICEA both have hardness of mammae, CONIUM right, SILICEA left nodules (CARBOANIMALIS, CONIUM, SILICEA); acute lancinating pains. (ASTERIAS.) Again it is to be especially considered if at every menstrual period the breasts become LARGE, SOREANDPAINFUL, aggravated by the LEASTJARORZVALKING.

In all the scirrhous affections of the breast, womb or other parts the pains of CONIUM are burning, stinging, or darting, and may make one think of APISMELLIFICA. The other symptoms must then decide between them.

CONIUM has marked action upon the sexual organs. In the male there is great weakness of the organs. He has intense desire and amorous thoughts, but is unable to perform. He has emissions at the very thought or presence of a woman. The erections are insufficient, last only a short time, or "go back" on him in the act of embrace, and he suffers with weakness and chagrin afterwards. This affects the mind and hypochondriasis of the

bluest blue takes possession of him. This condition of mind may obtain in both sexes; as a result of too free, and also especially too infrequent indulgence; or, excessive abstemiousness. Hence CANIUM becomes a good remedy for old bachelors and old maids. If the vertigo is also present in such cases CONIUM is sure to be of great benefit.

INTERMITTENTFLOWOFURINEISVERYCHARACTERISTIC. (CLEMATIS.) One might think that this was owing to a paralytic condition of the bladder. I don't know; but I do know that the symptom often occurs in the hypertrophy of the prostate gland incident to old age and CONIUM helps. "Sweats day or night; ASSOONASONESLEEPSOREVENWHENCLOSINGTHEEYES," is a characteristic found under no other remedy that I know of. (Reverse SAMBUCUS.)

Dr. Adolph Lippe once made a splendid cure of a complete one-sided paralysis in a man 80 years of age with this remedy, and was guided to it by this symptom. I think it would be rather a difficult task to give a correct pathological explanation of such a symptom; but there is a reason, and whether we can give it or not we can cure it if we have a corresponding one appearing under a remedy; where a cure is at all possible.

It is interesting to follow out the connections of symptoms. Take for instance the single prominent symptom of CONIUM, vertigo.